Interior View showing ladel pouring iron into pig-casting machine
SC 669097
Description Interior View showing ladel pouring iron into pig-casting machine
Date 1966
Collection Papers of Professor John R Hume, economic and industrial historian, Glasgow, Scotland
Catalogue Number SC 669097
Category On-line Digital Images
Scope and Content Clyde Iron Works, Glasgow This works was founded in 1786 by Thomas Edington and John MacKenzie, to make both pig and malleable iron. It later passed into the hands of the Dunlop family, and in the 1930s became part of Colvilles Ltd, who completely rebuilt it to supply liquid iron to the Clydebridge Steel Works, and pig iron to other steel works. This shows molten iron being poured from a ladle into the pig-casting machine. Much of the iron from this tap went to Clydebridge Steel Works in molten form. The residue is about to be poured into water-cooled moulds to make solid iron to be used in other open-hearth steel works. The rebuilding of Clyde Iron Works was substantially completed in 1952 when a second battery of coke ovens was commissioned. It remained a highly competitive works until its closure in 1978, which was occasioned by the phasing out of open-hearth steel making at Clydebridge and elsewhere. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
External Reference H35/66/3/7
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/collection/669097
File Format (TIF) Tagged Image File Format bitmap
Attribution: © HES. Reproduced courtesy of J R Hume
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